Condron v. Harl

374 P.2d 613, 46 Haw. 66, 1962 Haw. LEXIS 86
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 20, 1962
Docket4186
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 374 P.2d 613 (Condron v. Harl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Condron v. Harl, 374 P.2d 613, 46 Haw. 66, 1962 Haw. LEXIS 86 (haw 1962).

Opinion

*67 This is an appeal by defendant from a judgment entered against her on the verdict of a jury for $18,000 general damages, as well as stipulated special damages. Defendant admitted liability for the accident, in which plaintiff’s automobile was struck from behind by an automobile negligently operated by defendant’s decedent. The accident occurred on May 1, 1956.

Plaintiff sought, and under the instructions given by the court we must assume he was awarded, general damages for (a) pain, suffering and disability, and (b) loss of earnings and impairment of earning capacity.

Plaintiff also sought to recover for future expenses for medical attention and hospitalization. Under the instructions these were classed as special damages, but plaintiff’s counsel argued to the jury without objection that they were to be considered under the heading of general damages. We find it unnecessary to determine whether the general damages may have included an award for future medical and hospital expenses, as more fully set out below.

We first will consider Defendant’s Specifications of Error Nos. 2 and 5, contending that the court should not have given Plaintiff’s Instruction No. 15 submitting to the jury the matter of damages for “such loss of earnings in the past, if any, as he may have suffered,” and “such loss of earnings, or impairment of earning capacity, as he can reasonably be expected to suffer in the future * * *, if any,” but instead should have given Defendant’s Instruction No. 17, informing the jury that “* * * there is no evidence in this case from which it could be determined that plaintiff has suffered any loss of earnings or earning capacity * * In conjunction therewith we will consider Specifications of Error Nos. 6 and 7, relating to certain testimony of plaintiff as set out in the ensuing discussion.

*68 Defendant argues that the evidence was insufficient to enable the jury to make an award for loss of past or future earnings, and further argues: “This is not to say that plaintiff is not entitled to damages if his work is more difficult or painful to perform. He is entitled to such damages as general damages for pain and suffering.”

There was evidence that plaintiff received injuries to the neck and upper chest, and in the lower lumbar area. However, the former cleared up in a month, and when examined by Doctor Cooper six months after the accident, plaintiff’s primary discomfort was in the lumbar area. Advised at that time to wear a back brace, he did so for three weeks.

Plaintiff testified that during the months after the accident the pain in his lower back “consistently increased to the point where it was very difficult for me to lift things,” that the pain “is gradually- worsening,” that it has affected his sleep and his physical well-being, and that he has not been able to carry on the program that he carried on before the accident.

Plaintiff was 39 years old at the time of the trial; 36 years old at the time of the accident. He is 6 feet iy2 inches tall and at the time of the trial weighed 193 pounds as compared with 190 pounds upon graduation from college. During his attendance at school and college he actively participated in athletics. Graduating from college in 1942 after majoring in business administration, he served in the Navy with the Supply Corps from 1942 to 1946. From 1946 to 1949 he was with the State Department in China as director of personnel and later as a bureau chief for the Economic Cooperation Administration. After that, and until he came to Hawaii in 1952 or 1953, he was with Jantzen Knitting Mills as advertising and promotion manager for the East Coast. Since that time he has been a manufacturer’s representative, *69 representing two Enes and for a time a third, as wiff appear.

As a manufacturer’s representative, plaintiff has worked on commission, operating “as a wholesale function directly to retail stores,” presenting to selected stores the merchandise of the manufacturers he represents, which are Jantzen, producing primarily sportswear, and William Carter Company, producing primarily infants’ wear. Plaintiff also has purchased and resold merchandise to a minor extent. When plaintiff came to Hawaii he “established this business as a new business,” operating as the sole proprietor, with a girl in the office.

Incidental to plaintiff’s work as a manufacturer’s representative has been the handling of advertising, promotion and display problems, and effecting of stock control systems, for the stores on his list of accounts. (In this matter a change has come about, as below noted.)

The individual buyers of the stores place their orders from the samples plaintiff carries. The merchandise ordered usually is shipped directly to the store ordering it. He also handles reorders.

Plaintiff has a showroom in Honolulu. Formerly, he showed merchandise at service stores as well, and on other islands. He went to Kauai, Maui and Hawaii twice a year, taking with him 8-15 sample cases weighing 35-40 pounds each. Since the accident he has not been able to go to the other islands due to his back and the difficulty of lifting. He also has stopped all major showings in the field.

Before the accident plaintiff normally worked a full six days and in addition “quite a few evenings, quite a few Sundays” to establish the business. He averaged 10-12 hours a day. Since the accident he has worked a five-and-a-half-day week and has cut down on his hours but puts in a full working day. After working into the *70 late afternoon lie comes home tiréd and in pain. His injuries have “necessitated a great degree of making an old man out of me * * He lacks the energy or enthusiasm to do “all the extra work that should be done.” He has discontinued the promotion and display work, which he considers an important part of his function, and as to advertising does “only what is absolutely essential.” As to the stock control work, entailing a definite physical count of the merchandise in the store, he testified that he has had to hire temporary help for this work because it requires a great deal of lifting, bending and stooping. He has not found it economically feasible to hire people to do the advertising and promotion work.

Plaintiff testified that from the very beginning his plan had been to add as a third line that of Nani Sportswear, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Jantzen, that he did in fact add this line but due to his back condition couldn’t give the time and attention required to get the work organized and gave it up after a year or so. It was shown that Nani Sportswear had been in business since December 1950, and that plaintiff was a sales representative for the company from October 1, 1956 until July 23, 1958. The president of the company testified that the relationship was severed because the company required a full time representative who would also work with the mainland representatives. We will assume, however, for the purposes of this appeal, that plaintiff’s back condition did lead to the termination of his connection with the company.

Only for one year — the year 1955 — was plaintiff’s income prior to the accident shown.

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Bluebook (online)
374 P.2d 613, 46 Haw. 66, 1962 Haw. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/condron-v-harl-haw-1962.